Ronnie Lee Natho Sr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 6, 2014
Docket03-11-00498-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ronnie Lee Natho Sr. v. State (Ronnie Lee Natho Sr. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ronnie Lee Natho Sr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-11-00498-CR

Ronnie Lee Natho Sr., Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF LLANO COUNTY, 424TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. CR 6193, HONORABLE DANIEL H. MILLS, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant Ronnie Lee Natho Sr. of misapplication of an elderly

person’s fiduciary property and sentenced him to twenty-five years’ imprisonment. See Tex. Penal

Code § 32.45(b). Natho complains that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict and that

the trial court erred in denying his request for a mistrial. We affirm the judgment of conviction.

Factual Summary1

In July 2005, Rosie Shelton signed a statutory durable power of attorney appointing

Natho,2 her former grandson-in-law, to act as her agent and attorney-in-fact and giving him the

general authority to act on Shelton’s behalf, including with regard to Medicaid issues. The document

1 The parties are familiar with the facts and we will therefore present as brief a recitation as possible for purposes of this opinion. 2 Natho was married to Peggy Burthold, Shelton’s granddaughter, from 2002 through 2004. included “[s]pecial instructions applicable to gifts” and stated that Shelton had to initial beside the

provision if she wanted Natho to have the power to make gifts from her estate. Shelton did not

initial the “gift paragraph,” and Shelton’s attorney James Herbort testified unequivocally that Natho

did not have the right to make gifts under the power of attorney. In late 2007 and early 2008, Shelton

was admitted to a hospital and then moved into a nursing home, no longer able to care for herself.

On April 24, 2008, Natho transferred to himself ownership of Shelton’s automobile.

In early August, Shelton became upset when she received a letter from her insurance company saying

that ownership of her $3,000 life insurance policy had been transferred to Natho. On August 14,

Natho signed a general warranty deed, deeding Shelton’s house to himself in exchange for $10;

Shelton retained a life estate and continuing control, including the right to sell or lease the property,

and Natho received a remainder interest, assuming Shelton did not dispose of the property or

otherwise act to take back that interest. On August 15, a friend of Shelton’s noticed Shelton’s

car was gone and that the locks to Shelton’s house had been changed. She immediately informed

Shelton, and she testified that she did not think that Shelton knew Natho had given himself Shelton’s

car or any interest in the house.

Peggy Burthold, Shelton’s granddaughter and Natho’s former wife, testified that she

did not know Shelton was in a nursing home until early September 2008, when Herbort called to say

Shelton wanted to talk to her. Burthold was initially turned away from the nursing home because

Natho had left instructions that she was not allowed to see Shelton, but she spoke to Herbort and was

eventually allowed in. On September 4, Shelton revoked Natho’s power of attorney and signed a

new one in favor of Burthold.

2 On September 5, Herbort sent Natho a letter instructing him that he was no longer

authorized to act for Shelton and asking him to return Shelton’s property, including keys, bank

information, and insurance policies. On September 22, Natho sold Shelton’s car to a third-party,

receiving between $4,750 and $5,600,3 and on about September 26, he cashed out the life insurance

policy, receiving $1,746. Burthold said that excluding Shelton’s house, Natho gave himself about

$5,000 to $10,000.

Kim Kernodle, an attorney who helps clients qualify for Medicaid, testified for the

defense and said that Natho came to see her about Shelton’s needs in July 2008. Kernodle told

Natho he could pay for the nursing home from Shelton’s assets until she had less than $2,000 left

and then apply for Medicaid, or he could choose a “spend-down” option, meaning “he could

basically spend the money, which would include some gifts and that those gifts would incur a

penalty,” making Shelton eligible for Medicaid after the expiration of a penalty period; Natho chose

the spend-down option.

Kernodle said it was “legal” for Natho to make gifts to himself as long as Shelton’s

needs were met and advised him to execute the warranty deed for the house to fulfill Shelton’s

wishes as expressed in her will that Natho be her sole beneficiary. She said that Shelton retained full

control over the property, and that the gift of the property did not become complete until Shelton’s

death. Kernodle said that she would not have changed her spend-down advice if Shelton had named

other beneficiaries in her will but that it would have affected “who we recommended gifts be made

3 Records from the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles show that Natho received $5,600 for the vehicle, but $4,750 was referenced elsewhere in the testimony.

3 to. So if there had been another beneficiary in her will then we would not have allowed Mr. Natho

to only gift to himself. We would have had him make gifts according to the terms of the will.”

Kernodle acknowledged that Natho’s transfer of the car into his name occurred before he came to

her for advice and that Shelton’s house, car, and $1,500 of the cash value of her life insurance policy

would have been excluded from Medicaid’s calculations.

Kernodle said that, excluding the house, Natho gave himself a total of $27,560 in

“gifts” from Shelton’s estate—the car, the cash value of the insurance policy, and a check for

$24,276. However, her records valued the car at $1,535 and she did not know that Natho actually

received significantly more than $1,535. Kernodle did not believe Natho did anything to “the

detriment” of Shelton, but she also testified that by choosing the spend-down option, Natho

preserved assets that would have passed to him as beneficiary under her will.

One of Shelton’s nurses testified that Shelton suffered from Alzheimer’s, depression,

anxiety disorder, and delusions. She did not think Shelton was competent in January 2008, but

agreed that some of Shelton’s physical ailments can result in mental confusion. She also agreed that

in late March 2008, Shelton showed no impairment in her long-term memory, moderate impairment

in her short-term memory, a logical non-delusional thought process, appropriate use of speech,

and increased alertness. Psychologist Christopher Dalton regularly interacted with Shelton at the

nursing home and said she was able to answer his questions appropriately, volunteer relevant

information, discuss issues, and carry on conversations. Dalton remembered that Shelton was

distressed about her estate and legal affairs in the summer and fall of 2008, and he believed she was

competent when she changed her will and power of attorney.

4 In her deposition taken February 4, 2010, Shelton testified that she had not given

Natho permission to take title to her house, sell her car, change the ownership of her life insurance

policy, or write checks to himself on any of her bank accounts. During the deposition, Shelton

frequently could not remember the answers to questions she was asked and sometimes seemed

confused, such as when asked about the location of her house. At a deposition taken in November

2008, Natho admitted that he had probably spent $10,000 of Shelton’s money on his own behalf.

Sufficiency of the Evidence

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